Types of market structure:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Part 6 Perfect Competition
Advertisements

Competitive Markets.
Managerial Decisions in Competitive Markets
© 2007 Thomson South-Western. WHAT IS A COMPETITIVE MARKET? A competitive market has many buyers and sellers trading identical products so that each buyer.
Chapter 10: Perfect competition
Introduction: A Scenario
Harcourt, Inc. items and derived items copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. Perfectly competitive market u Many buyers and sellers u Sellers offer same goods.
Copyright © 2010, All rights reserved eStudy.us Market Structure – A classification system for the key traits of a market, including.
FIRMS IN COMPETITIVE MARKETS. Characteristics of Perfect Competition 1.There are many buyers and sellers in the market. 2.The goods offered by the various.
All Rights ReservedMicroeconomics © Oxford University Press Malaysia, – 1.
All Rights ReservedMicroeconomics © Oxford University Press Malaysia, – 1.
Perfect Competition Principles of Microeconomics Boris Nikolaev
Competitive Markets for Goods and Services
All Rights ReservedMicroeconomics © Oxford University Press Malaysia, – 1.
Lecture notes Prepared by Anton Ljutic. © 2004 McGraw–Hill Ryerson Limited Perfect Competition CHAPTER EIGHT.
Managerial Decisions in Competitive Markets
Market Structure In economics, market structure (also known as market form) describes the state of a market with respect to competition. The major market.
Lecture six © copyright : qinwang 2013 SHUFE school of international business.
Chapter 8 Perfect Competition ECONOMICS: Principles and Applications, 4e HALL & LIEBERMAN, © 2008 Thomson South-Western.
Perfect Competition Topic 5. Characteristics Pure Competition large number of sellers & buyers homogenous (identical) products low barriers to entry (free.
Copyright McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2002 Chapter 23: Pure Competition.
Pure Competition 6 LECTURE Market Structure Continuum FOUR MARKET MODELS Pure Competition.
Types of Market Structure in the Construction Industry
1 Chapter 8 Perfect Competition Key Concepts Key Concepts Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2002 South-Western College Publishing.
The Firms in Perfectly Competitive Market Chapter 14.
UNIT 6 Pricing under different market structures
Chapter 8Slide 1 Perfectly Competitive Markets Market Characteristics 1)Price taking: the individual firm sells a very small share of total market output.
0 Chapter In this chapter, look for the answers to these questions:  What is a perfectly competitive market?  What is marginal revenue? How is.
Chapter 8 Profit Maximization and Competitive Supply.
Chapter 8 Profit Maximization and Competitive Supply.
1 Chapter 8 Practice Quiz Tutorial Monopoly ©2004 South-Western.
Chapter 11: Managerial Decisions in Competitive Markets
Profit Maximization Chapter 8
Chapter 8 Profit Maximization and Competitive Supply.
Production Decisions in a Perfectly Competitive Market Chapter 6.
Price Discrimination Price discrimination exist when sales of identical goods or services are transacted at different prices from the same provider Example.
The Production Decisions of Competitive Firms Alternative market structures: perfect competition monopolistic competition oligopoly monopoly.
Perfect Competition Chapter 9 ECO 2023 Fall 2007.
Sunitha.S Assistant Professor School of Management Studies, National Institute of Technology (NIT) Calicut Perfectly Competitive Market.
Today n Perfect competition n Profit-maximization in the SR n The firm’s SR supply curve n The industry’s SR supply curve.
Chapter 14 Firms in Competitive Markets. What is a Competitive Market? Characteristics: – Many buyers & sellers – Goods offered are largely the same –
In this chapter, look for the answers to these questions:
Eco 6351 Economics for Managers Chapter 6. Competition Prof. Vera Adamchik.
Economic Analysis for Business Session XI: Firms in Competitive Market Instructor Sandeep Basnyat
Chapter 7: Pure Competition. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright  2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. What is a Pure Competition? Pure.
Chapter 7: Pure Competition Copyright © 2007 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
© 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley. What Is Perfect Competition? Perfect competition is an industry in which  Many firms sell identical products to many buyers.
1 Perfect Competition These slides supplement the textbook, but should not replace reading the textbook.
Competition Chapter 8. Recall: Producer Decision-making Optimal behavior: choose the right input combination or right production level Goal: –Max production.
Managerial Decisions in Competitive Markets BEC Managerial Economics.
8 | Perfect Competition Perfect Competition and Why It Matters How Perfectly Competitive Firms Make Output Decisions Entry and Exit Decisions in the Long.
ECON107 Principles of Microeconomics Week 13 DECEMBER w/12/2013 Dr. Mazharul Islam Chapter-12.
Copyright McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2002 Four Market Models Demand as seen by a Purely Competitive Seller Short-Run Profit Maximization Marginal Revenue.
Lecture Notes: Econ 203 Introductory Microeconomics Lecture/Chapter 14: Competitive Markets M. Cary Leahey Manhattan College Fall 2012.
Fig. 1 The Competitive Industry and Firm Ounces of Gold per Day Price per Ounce D $400 S Market Demand Curve Facing the Firm $400 Firm 1.The intersection.
Pricing and Output Decisions: Perfect Competition and Monopoly
ECONOMICS: Principles and Applications 3e HALL & LIEBERMAN © 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing Perfect Competition.
Chapter 14 Questions and Answers.
Copyright McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2002 Pure Competition 23 C H A P T E R.
Pure (perfect) Competition Please listen to the audio as you work through the slides.
MOD 58-60: PERFECT COMPETITION MARKET STRUCTURES.
Chapter 14 notes.
Lecture 7 Chapter 20: Perfect Competition 1Naveen Abedin.
Managerial Decisions in Competitive Markets BEC Managerial Economics.
Firm Behavior Under Perfect Competition
MARKET STRUCTURE 1: PERFECT COMPETITION AND MONOPOLY
Pure Competition in the Short-Run
23 Pure Competition.
Managerial Decisions in Competitive Markets
Lecture 7 cont’d Managerial Decisions in Competitive Markets
Presentation transcript:

Types of market structure: Perfect Competition Monopoly Monopolistic Competition Oligopoly Discussions: Characteristics of each market Demand curve (AR) and MR Profits-maximization rule Short run and long run output decision

Perfectly competitive market Characteristics: Large number of buyers and sellers in the market. Firms are price takers because the individual sales volume is relatively small compared to market volume. Each firm/ seller or each buyer acts independently, rather than coordinating decisions collectively Each firm produces a homogeneous (an identical) product: buyers cannot distinguish the product of one seller from that of another. Perfect information about prices The prices of all sellers are known A consumer will purchase at the lowest price available in the market No sale can be made at any higher price. Free entry into and exit from market: Equal access to resources Absence of promotion strategy and transport cost.

Demand (AR) and MR curve Total revenue (TR) = P x Q Average revenue (AR) = TR / Q = P Marginal revenue (MR) = ΔTR / ΔQ P Q TR=P x Q AR= TR/Q MR= ΔTR/ ΔQ 10 1 2 3 20 30 P, AR, MR P = AR = MR 10 Kuantiti (Q) 1 2 3

Demand at the market and firm level under perfect competition Market (industry) Firm P P D S P = AR = MR RM10 RM10 D S D 2000 Output 1 2 Output

Equilibrium of a Firm A firm is in equilibrium when it earns maximum profit or when minimum losses occur. Equilibrium output = output level which gives the maximum profit to a firm. Profit maximization Total revenue and total cost approach Profit = TR – TC Profit maximization: the highest vertical distance between TR and TC. Marginal revenue and marginal cost approach Profit maximization: MR = MC

Profit maximization under perfect competition Short-run output decision: MR = MC P > AC firm earns economic profits/abnormal profit P = AC zero economic profits/ normal profit P < AC firm suffers economic losses P < AC but P ≥ AVC loss by operating, but this loss < FC P < AVC shut down Long-run output decision

Short-run output decision P > AC P = AC Price & costs Price & costs MC MC AC AC A P1 AR=MR=P=DD P P2 A B AR=MR=P=DD Q Output (Q) Q Output (Q) TR = 0QAP1 TC = 0QBP2 Profit = TR – TC = P1ABP2 TR = 0PAQ TC = 0PAQ Profit =TR –TC = 0

Firm incurs a loss P < AC but P > AVC P < AC – a loss Harga & kos MC AC Harga & kos MC AC A P2 AVC P1 A C1 B AR=MR=P P B AR=MR=P C2 E Q output TR = 0QBP1 TC = 0QAP2 TR < TC, firm incurs a loss = P1BAP2 This firm can reduce cost by using a better technology to obtain normal profit. AC shifts downwards. output Q TR = 0PBQ = 0C2EQ + C2EBP TC = 0C1AQ = 0C2EQ + C2EAC1 The firm incurs a loss, but TR > VC or AR > AVC

MC and short-run supply curve for a competitive firm AVC MC Po P1 P2 P3 Qo Q1 Q2 Q3 J K L M MC curve at points JKLM = a firm’s SS curve Output Price

Long-run competitive equilibrium Free entry into and exit from market: if profits were +ve, entry would occur and P would fall. If profits were –ve, exit would occur and P would rise. Ultimately P = AC, all firms in the market earn zero economic profits/ normal profit. P = MR= MC, P = minimum AC. Harga & kos LMC LAC SMC SAC AR=MR=P P Output Q

Calculation approach: 1. The cost function for a firm is given by C = 5 + Q2 If the firm sells output in a perfectly competitive market and other firms in the industry sell output at a price of RM20, what price should the manager of this firm put on the product? What level of output should be produced to maximize profits? How much profits will be earned?

Answer: The manager should price the product at RM20 Profit-maximizing output: MC = P. MC = 2Q = 20, Q = 10 Profits = TR – TC = PxQ – (5 + Q2) = 10(20) – 5 – 100 = RM95

Suppose the cost function for a firm is given by C = 100 + Q2 Suppose the cost function for a firm is given by C = 100 + Q2. If the firm sells output in a perfectly competitive market and other firms in the industry sell output at a price of RM10, what level of output should the firm produce to maximize profits or minimize losses? What will be the level of profits or losses if the firm makes the optimal decision?

Answer: P = RM10, MC = 2Q. Profit maximizing output: P = MC, 10 = 2Q, Q = 5 units. Profit = TR – TC =10(5) – 100 – 52 = 50 – 100 – 25 = -RM75 The firm incurs a loss of RM75, which is less than the loss of RM100 (fixed costs) that would result if the firm shut down its plant in the short run.

A vegetable seller faces a horizontal demand curve A vegetable seller faces a horizontal demand curve. Total variable costs are given by TVC=150Q – 20Q2 + Q3. At what price should the firm shut down? Solution: Shut down point occurs when AVC is at the minimum point. It also happens when P=MR=MC=AVC. Derive TVC to obtain MC. MC = dTVC/dQ = 150 – 40Q +3Q2 Divide TVC by Q to obtain AVC: AVC = TVC/Q = 150 – 20Q + Q2 To find shut down price, set MC = AVC: 150 – 40Q + 3Q2 = 150 – 20Q + Q2 2Q2 – 20Q = 0, 2Q(Q - 10) = 0 Q = 0 or Q = 10 Substitute Q = 10 into the MC equation to obtain P P = MC = 150 – 40(10) + 3(10)2 = 50 Shut down price is RM50.